Layla MarinoAmbientIt’s strange to think of minimalist ambient electronic music
as being political, but it often is. Phillip Glass, for example, almost always
had a political or cultural message in his compositions that was often left up
to his audiences to interpret with no help from language or even giveaway
titles. New York-based composer Mike Sayre is following in those footsteps
somewhat with his EP, due out June 2, called Music for Icebergs. At least in this case there’s a bit of a hint
in the album’s title.

Mike Sayre, like many experimental electronic artists, is
classically trained. His first instrument, surprisingly, is the French horn,
and he holds a degree from Rutgers for the instrument as well as another from
Ball state in Digital Media. The second degree makes more sense in the context
of this album, but there is very little French horn on Music for Icebergs, save for a few supportive swells in the closing
track, “Elegy”.

Sayre says the five tracks on Music for Icebergs are inspired by the changing climate and its
effect on the world’s ice pack, though nothing in the album or his statements
about it comes right out and says it’s about global warming. Of course, the
fact that proceeds from the album will be donated to various climate change
organizations is, however, a pretty strong giveaway.

Cursory literature, charitable causes and titles
notwithstanding, in the case of Music for
Icebergs listeners may in fact be able to guess the theme anyway. The album
is filled with the sounds of howling wind, cracking ice and other ambient
sounds which, if nothing else, would make one think of desolate tundra or an
icy landscape.

The album’s first single, “Fimbul” is a quite literal
example, as its main “melody”, for lack of a better term, is, in fact, a very
cold and desolate sounding wind. Also heavily sampled is an almost terrifying
cracking sound which one could interpret as splitting wood, but given the wind
it almost certainly will conjure up images of being inside an ice cave and said
ice cracking, moving, splitting, or in some sections even caving in. Imagining
oneself under the ice floes in a massive glacier doesn’t seem far off.

The quite prominent natural glacial sounds in most of the
tracks on Music for Icebergs are
driven by some interesting electronic feature such as low, almost Schuman
resonance-level vibrations and, somewhat, surprisingly, a full orchestral
compliment. After all the wind, creaking and cracking of “Fimbul”, the track
ends with a symphonic composition of both classical instruments and electronic
melodies. “Flows/Floes” is perhaps the most melodic track on the EP, because
although it also has a full complement of water-driven “glacial” sounds, it
also has a quite beautiful sustained melody throughout.

By the time the closing track, “Elegy” comes around, a
pattern can be seen in the way this EP is arranged. It’s definitely a
commentary on climate change with a focus on the glaciers and icebergs, as
Sayre takes the listener from “Genesis”, or the inception of an iceberg,
through “Fimbul”, translated loosely from ancient Norse as “hatchet”, possibly
representing calving, to the “Anthropocene” (human) age and eventually the “Elegy”
of the earth’s ice packs. If audiences are looking for guidance as to the point
of this EP, in this case the titles are very helpful and give an extra
poignancy to the music. “Elegy” is a heartwrenching period on the end of the
iceberg sentence, and it’s made all the more evocative by the fact that it’s
reflecting reality.

If nothing else, Mike Sayre’s Music for Icebergs shows the passion and drama that can be captured
in the most unlikely places, like under the ice. The music he composes
compliments and underlines this point, and he makes the icebergs part of their
own opera of sorts, a performance so visceral that listeners will find
themselves feeling the cold and watching their breath as they conjure up images
of frozen ice floes, sub-pack caves and icebergs calving in front of their
eyes. Music for Icebergs is a wonderful
study in the music of nature as well as the plight of the planet right now. It
represents the best that experimental ambient music can bring to audiences.

May 31, 2017http://www.brutalresonance.com/review/mike-sayre-music-for-icebergs/4

Mike Sayre - Music for Icebergs

It’s strange to think of minimalist ambient electronic music
as being political, but it often is. Phillip Glass, for example, almost always
had a political or cultural message in his compositions that was often left up
to his audiences to interpret with no help from language or even giveaway
titles. New York-based composer Mike Sayre is following in those footsteps
somewhat with his EP, due out June 2, called Music for Icebergs. At least in this case there’s a bit of a hint
in the album’s title.

Mike Sayre, like many experimental electronic artists, is
classically trained. His first instrument, surprisingly, is the French horn,
and he holds a degree from Rutgers for the instrument as well as another from
Ball state in Digital Media. The second degree makes more sense in the context
of this album, but there is very little French horn on Music for Icebergs, save for a few supportive swells in the closing
track, “Elegy”.

Sayre says the five tracks on Music for Icebergs are inspired by the changing climate and its
effect on the world’s ice pack, though nothing in the album or his statements
about it comes right out and says it’s about global warming. Of course, the
fact that proceeds from the album will be donated to various climate change
organizations is, however, a pretty strong giveaway.

Cursory literature, charitable causes and titles
notwithstanding, in the case of Music for
Icebergs listeners may in fact be able to guess the theme anyway. The album
is filled with the sounds of howling wind, cracking ice and other ambient
sounds which, if nothing else, would make one think of desolate tundra or an
icy landscape.

The album’s first single, “Fimbul” is a quite literal
example, as its main “melody”, for lack of a better term, is, in fact, a very
cold and desolate sounding wind. Also heavily sampled is an almost terrifying
cracking sound which one could interpret as splitting wood, but given the wind
it almost certainly will conjure up images of being inside an ice cave and said
ice cracking, moving, splitting, or in some sections even caving in. Imagining
oneself under the ice floes in a massive glacier doesn’t seem far off.

The quite prominent natural glacial sounds in most of the
tracks on Music for Icebergs are
driven by some interesting electronic feature such as low, almost Schuman
resonance-level vibrations and, somewhat, surprisingly, a full orchestral
compliment. After all the wind, creaking and cracking of “Fimbul”, the track
ends with a symphonic composition of both classical instruments and electronic
melodies. “Flows/Floes” is perhaps the most melodic track on the EP, because
although it also has a full complement of water-driven “glacial” sounds, it
also has a quite beautiful sustained melody throughout.

By the time the closing track, “Elegy” comes around, a
pattern can be seen in the way this EP is arranged. It’s definitely a
commentary on climate change with a focus on the glaciers and icebergs, as
Sayre takes the listener from “Genesis”, or the inception of an iceberg,
through “Fimbul”, translated loosely from ancient Norse as “hatchet”, possibly
representing calving, to the “Anthropocene” (human) age and eventually the “Elegy”
of the earth’s ice packs. If audiences are looking for guidance as to the point
of this EP, in this case the titles are very helpful and give an extra
poignancy to the music. “Elegy” is a heartwrenching period on the end of the
iceberg sentence, and it’s made all the more evocative by the fact that it’s
reflecting reality.

If nothing else, Mike Sayre’s Music for Icebergs shows the passion and drama that can be captured
in the most unlikely places, like under the ice. The music he composes
compliments and underlines this point, and he makes the icebergs part of their
own opera of sorts, a performance so visceral that listeners will find
themselves feeling the cold and watching their breath as they conjure up images
of frozen ice floes, sub-pack caves and icebergs calving in front of their
eyes. Music for Icebergs is a wonderful
study in the music of nature as well as the plight of the planet right now. It
represents the best that experimental ambient music can bring to audiences.